The Study And Practice Of YogaAn Exposition of the Yoga Sutras of PatanjaliVolumeII

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anything?” He threw the pot on the head of Siva and went away. Then it seems, a
voice came, “Foolish man! You had not the patience for one more pot? You were
patient enough for 107. You could not wait for one more? And that would have
worked the miracle!”


Likewise may be the fate of many people like us. We may be working very hard. We
may be spending half of our life in sincere effort towards achieving something, but at
the last moment we lose hope and give up the effort altogether. The advice of
Patanjali is that this should not be.


Chapter 55

THE CAUSE OF BONDAGE

It is pointed out once again, for clarifying the path of the seeker, how one has got into
bondage and what its significance is in the effort at the practice of yoga meditation.
What is the bondage from which we wish to be free? What is actually meant by this
thraldom of samsara? How has it come about? Why is it that we are full of sorrow
and we have no peace? This is mentioned in a single sutra, avidyā kṣetram uttareṣāṁ
prasupta tanu vicchinna udārāṇām (II.4), which states that the series of processes by
which the individual soul has got into bondage consists of nothing but pains and
pains, one after another, in various degrees of involvement.


As far as the origin of bondage is concerned, the common background of all schools
of thought and philosophy is the same—namely, ignorance of the true nature of
things. ‘Avidya’, ‘ajnana’, ‘nescience’, etc. are the terms used to designate this
condition. What actually exists is not known; this is called avidya. We cannot, by any
amount of effort of the mind, understand what is actually there in front of us; and
whatever we are seeing with our eyes or think in our mind is not the true state of
affairs. This is called avidya. We may logically argue, deduce, induce, but all this is
like the definitions given by the blind men who touched different parts of the
elephant. Every school of thought is like one blind man touching one part of truth
and giving a partial definition of it, but never the whole definition of it. On account of
a partial grasp of truth, there is a partial attitude to life; and everything follows from
that, one after the other.


This principle of bondage is the subject of the vital discussions in Buddhist
psychology known as Paticcasamuppada, or dependent origination. Every successive
link in the chain of bondage is dependent in one way or the other on the previous
link. There is then a circular action of these links—one hitting upon the other,
intensifying the other and compelling the other to act more forcefully than it did
earlier, so that it may look that we are becoming worse and worse every day, rather
than better. This is because of a peculiar psychological process that takes place which
is difficult to fathom on account of our involvement. Bondage is nothing but
involvement, and not an ordinary type of involvement—a very, very complex type so
that there is attack from every side. And, apparently, there is no escape.

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